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Nov 27, 2012
11/12
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i knew an older artist who once lived in paris. one day i said to him, "can you tell me something about color?" he says, "there's one thing i can tell you -- nobody understands color." i said, "fine, that's just the way it is with me." and that was the end of that problem. around 1958, '59, somewhere around there, i started a painting. it was 18 feet by about 9 or 10 feet, and i'd never done a painting that big. and then i realized i didn't have the space to come back to see my painting. it was too close, and i couldn't seem to get far enough away to see what i'm doing. then my feeling about how i see a painting changed. i realized every time i do something, if i have to run back to take a look at it, it's impossible. i can't paint that way. ah! ah! instead of looking, i had to feel it. ah! in order to feel it, to work with it, i had to carry that feeling. well, a little more, little more, little more. it really made the biggest difference in my life as far as painting goes. pat responds to something much more beautiful, much more
i knew an older artist who once lived in paris. one day i said to him, "can you tell me something about color?" he says, "there's one thing i can tell you -- nobody understands color." i said, "fine, that's just the way it is with me." and that was the end of that problem. around 1958, '59, somewhere around there, i started a painting. it was 18 feet by about 9 or 10 feet, and i'd never done a painting that big. and then i realized i didn't have the space to come...
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Nov 28, 2012
11/12
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the city--paris. of all the artists who worked in paris, it's picasso who's been elevated by critics and historians to the status of the modern artist as hero. to honor him, the french installed all the works he never wanted to sell in the grandest of museums, a supreme monument founded by the establishment to an artist whose reputation was built on the subversion of establishments. here, at the musee picasso, is an exhibition focused on the single most famous modern picture painted by picasso-- les demoiselles d'avignon. this painting is repeatedly claimed to be the first modern painting of the 20th century. far more important, i think, is that this painting has two quite separate identities, even reputations. in the first place, it has a reputation as what might be called a highly expressive painting, a painting whose content is sexuality and violence. in the second place, it has a reputation as the work that opened the way to a movement which we think of as quintessentially 20th-century-- cubism. i
the city--paris. of all the artists who worked in paris, it's picasso who's been elevated by critics and historians to the status of the modern artist as hero. to honor him, the french installed all the works he never wanted to sell in the grandest of museums, a supreme monument founded by the establishment to an artist whose reputation was built on the subversion of establishments. here, at the musee picasso, is an exhibition focused on the single most famous modern picture painted by...
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Nov 27, 2012
11/12
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but as a young man in paris, he joined th friends like max ernst and jean arp in the emerging surrealist movement of the 1920s. in his painting "the farm," miro's characteristic symbols and themes began to appear: serpentine shapes, checkerboard patterns, infinite space represented by the moon or a star. in 1922, he painted "the farmer's wife," the ancestress of countless female symbols that also became a continuing motif in miro's art. in 1924, his art broke free of gravitational constraints in the surrealistic world of "harlequin's carnival." over the years, he developed his own personal symbolism, and in the 1950s, the scale of his art grew with such works as a mural at harrd university and "the wall ofhe sun" for unesco in pas. as his work grew in size, miro continued what he termed "a process of simplification." he stated, "little by little, i have managed to reach a point at which i use no more than a small number of forms and colors." this process found a culminating expression in his eightoot-high painting "femme," miro entered the project with much enthusim, stating, "i'll go in
but as a young man in paris, he joined th friends like max ernst and jean arp in the emerging surrealist movement of the 1920s. in his painting "the farm," miro's characteristic symbols and themes began to appear: serpentine shapes, checkerboard patterns, infinite space represented by the moon or a star. in 1922, he painted "the farmer's wife," the ancestress of countless female symbols that also became a continuing motif in miro's art. in 1924, his art broke free of...
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Nov 28, 2012
11/12
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but as a young man in paris, he joined with friends like max ernst and jean arp in the emeing surrealist movement of the 1920s. in his painting "the farm," miro's characteristic symbols and themes began to appear: serpenne shapes, checkeoard patterns, finite space represented by the moon or a star. in 1922, he painted "the farmer's wife," the ancestress of countless female symbols that also became a continuing motif in miro's art. in 1924, his art broke free of gravitational constraints in theurrealtic world of "harleqn's carnival." over the years, he developed his own personal symbolism, and in the 1950s, the scal his art grew with such works as a mural at harvard university and "the wall ofhe sun" for unesco in pas. as his work grew in size, miro continued what he termed "a process of simplification." he stated, "little by little, i have managed to reach a point at which i use no more than a small number of forms and colors." this process found a culminating expression the maquette for the tial gallery's tapestry. miro entered the project with much enthusim, stating, "i'll go into this
but as a young man in paris, he joined with friends like max ernst and jean arp in the emeing surrealist movement of the 1920s. in his painting "the farm," miro's characteristic symbols and themes began to appear: serpenne shapes, checkeoard patterns, finite space represented by the moon or a star. in 1922, he painted "the farmer's wife," the ancestress of countless female symbols that also became a continuing motif in miro's art. in 1924, his art broke free of gravitational...
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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you can think you're in new york or milan or in paris. most of the people have televisions, and if i haven't drove on purpose, i think i would be in club immediate in tel aviv. >> does that throw any parallel to you with the building of this wall and they let the jewish population in there? >> let's look for who is more guilty, who did worse things, and i really don't care. i think -- i even don't think that the people who were killed in the holocaust were all good people. they were just victims, not good and not bad. victims. and the palestinians at this moment are victims. they're not better than me. they're just victims. and i don't want them to be victims. but why compare it? >> i don't compare it. my problem with it is i think if you've gone as a generation through such suffering why you don't sympathize with the new victims. >> i do. >> not you personally, but i'm just saying this is to me very troubling. because, you know, you meet people all the time that tell you, offense, my grandfather died mere, my aunt died there. and i'm lik
you can think you're in new york or milan or in paris. most of the people have televisions, and if i haven't drove on purpose, i think i would be in club immediate in tel aviv. >> does that throw any parallel to you with the building of this wall and they let the jewish population in there? >> let's look for who is more guilty, who did worse things, and i really don't care. i think -- i even don't think that the people who were killed in the holocaust were all good people. they were...
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Nov 22, 2012
11/12
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he came back to hollywood in 1962, when he and harold arlen did gay paris, which is with judy garland. she asked them to come back. and it's a cult animated cartoon now, which you can get in your video. and i remember him putting on a show at the taber auditorium. "welcome back, yip," you know? and hein '62. amy goodman: but that means that the wizard of oz made it big during the time that he was blacklisted. that wasand when you consider the social commentary that it was making, that's pretty profound. ernie harburg: yeah, but i don't think hardly anyone knows the political symbolism underneath the wizard of oz, because, again, it's a thing that happens in finian's rainbow, even though as peter stone, a noted playwright on broadway, said, "it's the only socialist tract ever on broadway." alright? people don't hear the political message in it, ok? they are vastly entertained. the same thing happens with the wizard. you know, nobody would even think of such a thing. yip harburg: my songs, like "when the idle poor become the idle rich" and "brother, can you spare a dime?" caused a great
he came back to hollywood in 1962, when he and harold arlen did gay paris, which is with judy garland. she asked them to come back. and it's a cult animated cartoon now, which you can get in your video. and i remember him putting on a show at the taber auditorium. "welcome back, yip," you know? and hein '62. amy goodman: but that means that the wizard of oz made it big during the time that he was blacklisted. that wasand when you consider the social commentary that it was making,...
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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he was a paleontologist who was sent out from paris and did a lot of mapping of the terrain and was part of the discovery of peking man, in fact. so, here is a christian deeply committed in his own paradigm but spent all that time in china and asia absorbing in a sense that the imperative of finding oneness and he found it in a powerful way. >> and so true that you get that feeling of oneness instinctively from being in that world view. yes janet, then we go to the roll in here. >> i wanted to go back to the relationship idea for just a moment - maybe the reason that doctrines define the male relationships is that the relationship of the female with offspring when everybody has got a mother is just a biologically programmed thing. those two beings share body cells together and it seems that this doesn't even need words to describe that definition of that relationship with ones mother. and so it maybe the male relationships need more definition because they don't start out with that level of oneness. >> well, that's exactly the somewhat apologetic explanation i came across. that it's so b
he was a paleontologist who was sent out from paris and did a lot of mapping of the terrain and was part of the discovery of peking man, in fact. so, here is a christian deeply committed in his own paradigm but spent all that time in china and asia absorbing in a sense that the imperative of finding oneness and he found it in a powerful way. >> and so true that you get that feeling of oneness instinctively from being in that world view. yes janet, then we go to the roll in here. >>...
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even before and now here i am in paris it's fantastic a dream come true. and right next to the eiffel tower the cossacks met a few russian speaking french month one for five or ten. because sex adopted many french practices off their return to russia an eight hundred fourteen course like women spoke to tight fitting blouse to triumph will build him a concept town of no bitch a cask that stole shaped streets were laid out in the paris model one of the how minutes was even close powers. yes i. think the. cossacks will be cossacks on the eiffel tower all anywhere else once cossacks start to sing as just no stopping the. goats that. earth shall follow for sure that at that end up things like out of luck i think you know your shit out. of. the journey has come to an end alexei never said seth green is his horse for the last time before setting off home . let me have your leg what you think needs a brush you get easy now bubble. good boy. the noble beasts will return in holes boxes. will travel with the on those by coach he's in high spirits because he won't be
even before and now here i am in paris it's fantastic a dream come true. and right next to the eiffel tower the cossacks met a few russian speaking french month one for five or ten. because sex adopted many french practices off their return to russia an eight hundred fourteen course like women spoke to tight fitting blouse to triumph will build him a concept town of no bitch a cask that stole shaped streets were laid out in the paris model one of the how minutes was even close powers. yes i....
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such a long way to paris it might be difficult to travel on horseback there. on the fifteenth day of the journey the cossacks have made it to poland in two weeks they've covered the same distance as russian troops did during this two month long pursuit of napoleon. in december eight hundred twelve napoleon into the russia with a fifty thousand strong elite but he left with only fifteen hundred. frostbitten troops. was no foregone conclusion. is more than a cossack he's also a historian and writer his latest book will tell the story of this journey is keeping a diary that. is a once in a lifetime chance couldn't turn it down. you know the love. you know your dog. will be enough the french won nearly every battle but as the russian army increased in number it was quite apparent that the french would windley by the time the polian was retreating to poland has only had almost run out of artillery provisions and even forces. buzz off it's mine you got yours finish it you i like vassileva rennick i like saying of a sense of does not hail from the dawn area even thou
such a long way to paris it might be difficult to travel on horseback there. on the fifteenth day of the journey the cossacks have made it to poland in two weeks they've covered the same distance as russian troops did during this two month long pursuit of napoleon. in december eight hundred twelve napoleon into the russia with a fifty thousand strong elite but he left with only fifteen hundred. frostbitten troops. was no foregone conclusion. is more than a cossack he's also a historian and...
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russian cossacks are here again marching towards paris. really but it comes from a family of cossacks and he's learned to sing the old version of them. when his horse became lingering the journey vassily had to trail behind the procession he still believes the question of who won the battle is relevant. but you would say the battle ended in a draw but it was an honorable droll there's no doubt the french emerged victorious they did override the battlefield to overseas the battlefield was the victor but even if it was a victory it was a costly one. to ensure that good morning. well over. at least for. the excitement of the grand tour of paris has still a long way in the future for the course i could just beginning to get ready for the journey. and it all started here exactly one year ago. hats on. vassily is making ready to ride his horse is called. good boy come over here for a ride down. just like a member of the family they often joke at the horses or even more dead and their wives and children. need to talk to him all the time you see h
russian cossacks are here again marching towards paris. really but it comes from a family of cossacks and he's learned to sing the old version of them. when his horse became lingering the journey vassily had to trail behind the procession he still believes the question of who won the battle is relevant. but you would say the battle ended in a draw but it was an honorable droll there's no doubt the french emerged victorious they did override the battlefield to overseas the battlefield was the...
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before and now here i am in paris it's fantastic a dream come true. and right next to the eiffel tower the cossacks met a few russian speaking french month one called five or ten. because socks adopted many french practices off their return to russia in eighteen fourteen women spoke to tight fitting blouses to triumph were built in the coastal town of no bitch i can ask it still shaped streets were laid out in the paris model one of the how minutes was even though promised. oh yes of. course x. will be cossacks on the eiffel tower all anyone else wants to sing as just no stopping the. bird shuffle over your head i don't doubt that us thinks that you know. i think that you. the journey has come to an end alexei never said seth brings his horse for the last time before setting off home. let me have your leg but you need to brush easy now bubble for good boy. the noble beasts will return in horse boxes. will travel with the others by coach he's in high spirits because he won't be homesick for much longer but his joy is modded by the prospect of passing w
before and now here i am in paris it's fantastic a dream come true. and right next to the eiffel tower the cossacks met a few russian speaking french month one called five or ten. because socks adopted many french practices off their return to russia in eighteen fourteen women spoke to tight fitting blouses to triumph were built in the coastal town of no bitch i can ask it still shaped streets were laid out in the paris model one of the how minutes was even though promised. oh yes of. course x....
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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it was paris. paris saved his life, literally saved his life. >> safer: we moved on to the sorbonne, paris's ancient university. it changed the lives of many other americans. >> mccullough: charles sumner was here in 1838. and he had come to broaden himself, to become a more civilized human being. >> safer: sumner was a young boston lawyer who found himself studying alongside students from colonial africa. >> mccullough: he saw that they were dressed exactly like the other students. they were treated like everybody else. and he wrote in his journal that night, "i wonder if the way we treat black people at home has more to do with what we've been taught than the natural order of things." and it was... it was an epiphany for him. >> safer: sumner went home convinced of the evils of slavery, and became a major voice in the campaign to abolish it. >> mccullough: so you talk about dropping a stone in the pond that sends out ripples. this one young man, one american, studying here at the sorbonne, has th
it was paris. paris saved his life, literally saved his life. >> safer: we moved on to the sorbonne, paris's ancient university. it changed the lives of many other americans. >> mccullough: charles sumner was here in 1838. and he had come to broaden himself, to become a more civilized human being. >> safer: sumner was a young boston lawyer who found himself studying alongside students from colonial africa. >> mccullough: he saw that they were dressed exactly like the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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in paris, i could see what was chic in what was not. one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was wearing boots. they looked at me and said, [unintelligible] as a reproach. i thought, ha ha, very funny. [laughter] but it was beautiful, which can be true but it can be awful, too, a beige. it is not because it is beige, but it could be the absolute beauty, no. it depends how it is done, how it is made, how it looks like. so i was like, let's say, killing the french fashion. i should say france in general. so absolute. it has to be like that. things that i did not feel like. i think it's time i was going, i felt really in love with london. i felt more freedom. when i was going there, it gave me -- [unintelligible] sending like, yes, go on to do the things you feel are good. because it is very conservative in paris. >> only you had come to san francisco. >> yes. >> i can only imagine what you would have produced. [applause] >> that is true. >> here is this good little boy who is be heading classically and is very ch
in paris, i could see what was chic in what was not. one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was wearing boots. they looked at me and said, [unintelligible] as a reproach. i thought, ha ha, very funny. [laughter] but it was beautiful, which can be true but it can be awful, too, a beige. it is not because it is beige, but it could be the absolute beauty, no. it depends how it is done, how it is made, how it looks like. so i was like, let's say, killing the french...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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they enter the paris on june 16, i think. the government in paris led to the south. they were practically in a different city every day. and churchill hoped and pleaded with the french to continue fighting. both countries had pledged, one to another, that they would not drop out of the war and make a separate peace, unless they were released from this pledge by the other. the french begin to think that they would want to make a separate peace, and they began to talk to the british about this. churchill said no, we can't release you from that pledge. we want you to keep fighting all the way down to the mediterranean if you have to. and if you have to, across the mediterranean, keep fighting from north africa. and a big part of the reason was that the french fleet was a very, very large fleet, many battleships. it was the fourth largest navy in the world. and churchill was very worried that if france was conquered, then hitler would seize the french fleet. and the arithmetic was, if you put the german fleet, which was considerable, they had the bismarck coming along, t
they enter the paris on june 16, i think. the government in paris led to the south. they were practically in a different city every day. and churchill hoped and pleaded with the french to continue fighting. both countries had pledged, one to another, that they would not drop out of the war and make a separate peace, unless they were released from this pledge by the other. the french begin to think that they would want to make a separate peace, and they began to talk to the british about this....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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a dream of the elegance of paris. and i remember that i propose -- it was the last new bid of coutoure that arrived. i thought to propose -- [unintelligible] why don't you take one designer like vivian westwood or others to make one season, one coutoure collection? >> you should call some up immediately and suggest the deal. >> [laughs] that is true. each one to make their own collection should not be back. a very attractive idea. >> as you do not want to talk about art, we will not say your work is art. let's be very vulgar and talk about money. [laughter] it is extraordinary what you have produced in coutoure. does that make any money? quick to be honest, what we produce in coutoure does not make money but it does include money. i must say, i am very proud of that. when i started to do coutoure, after a lot of stories that may be issued do another job, i said, ok, i will do my own collection. i started and never stopped after. on boat one, one woman, done all in lace in the exhibition. it starts like, ok, i did not
a dream of the elegance of paris. and i remember that i propose -- it was the last new bid of coutoure that arrived. i thought to propose -- [unintelligible] why don't you take one designer like vivian westwood or others to make one season, one coutoure collection? >> you should call some up immediately and suggest the deal. >> [laughs] that is true. each one to make their own collection should not be back. a very attractive idea. >> as you do not want to talk about art, we...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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since they said other systems did it we decided to look at the systems in paris france. it took months to identify the right officials and in this case either the head of operations or the systems schedulinger all but one which was new york agreed to an extensive interview by two of us and per the rules we were not identified. nevertheless of the interviews as described in the report were significant. all transit systems it became clear had multiple systems that were similar and had challenges and all needed to deal with complex traffic, scheduling, and terrain problems uniquely their own, and yet as we had known the san francisco controller's survey had shown all had higher reliability and rider seaferz than muni and we determined that all systems use switchbacks they only did so in cases of equipment break down or emergencies except for one. one system which happened to be the santa clara mta does use switch backs and interestingly enough their head is the former employee of muni, michael burns, who was a former employee and went to work for them. as you supervisors ma
since they said other systems did it we decided to look at the systems in paris france. it took months to identify the right officials and in this case either the head of operations or the systems schedulinger all but one which was new york agreed to an extensive interview by two of us and per the rules we were not identified. nevertheless of the interviews as described in the report were significant. all transit systems it became clear had multiple systems that were similar and had challenges...
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of ski see reporting from paris and france. the occupy wall street movement might have finally found a way to save america's troubled one percent the new charity brainchild will get rid of american citizens debts resident hit the streets of new york to find out of people believing that. started by the people behind the occupy wall street rolling to believe is a project that is buying up debt just like a collection agency would but instead of collecting on it there absolving that debt in an effort to liberate america from the chains of debt is this ingenious or a way to let slackers off the hook from responsibility this week let's talk about that depends on where the funds are coming from crowd sourced crowd sourced yet crowdsourcing is great if they can clear people's debt who need it then i think that's the good thing to do are you into that. i take that as a yes not a lot but as you know of it well if you're below i'm not sure that they won't go right back in again so i think people need to responsible for their own actions w
of ski see reporting from paris and france. the occupy wall street movement might have finally found a way to save america's troubled one percent the new charity brainchild will get rid of american citizens debts resident hit the streets of new york to find out of people believing that. started by the people behind the occupy wall street rolling to believe is a project that is buying up debt just like a collection agency would but instead of collecting on it there absolving that debt in an...
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ok rachel i'd like to go back to you in paris and what's going to happen with the g.o.p. moving forward because it seems to me that you know i i think most people who watch this program know my politics ok and i disagree with a lot with romney had to say but there's some other issues on the economy that you know make perfect sense here but it's really what hurt him is his own party because he wasn't conservative enough because mitt romney is a moderate ok a moderate and you're right george bush was elected by these same people ok so i mean is it really the republican party's problem because it has it's tea party members and we have the fiscal cliff coming up and you know it's just you know obama isn't an easy situation to say i don't have anybody to talk to and he'll be right. well i think they have to go back to the drawing board and they have to revamp their entire platform they have to decide what's important to address because i think what the public is saying to a certain extent in this election and i don't think it's the first time they've expressed this is that rea
ok rachel i'd like to go back to you in paris and what's going to happen with the g.o.p. moving forward because it seems to me that you know i i think most people who watch this program know my politics ok and i disagree with a lot with romney had to say but there's some other issues on the economy that you know make perfect sense here but it's really what hurt him is his own party because he wasn't conservative enough because mitt romney is a moderate ok a moderate and you're right george bush...
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paris has announced plans to install a syrian ambassador from the new opposition group to show of support from western nations which also want to lift the embargo to open the style of sending weapons to syrian rebels plus with the eurozone officially back in recession we report on how in some of the better off countries it's the elderly who are taking the financial hit this and more just ahead here on altie. catalonia wants to get its independence from the rest of spain locals feel that madrid texas of catalonia economic success is a way putting the region into debt trust me working hard only to have it all taxed away is very aggravating i can see why people are frustrated but the people who want independence have a very odd slogan catalonia a new european state so let me get this straight you want independence but you want to stay in the e.u. is that what you mean what exactly would that change that's not really gaining independence that shifting dependencies stay in the e.u. means you won't have control of your borders you'll still be on the euro so you won't have your own currency you
paris has announced plans to install a syrian ambassador from the new opposition group to show of support from western nations which also want to lift the embargo to open the style of sending weapons to syrian rebels plus with the eurozone officially back in recession we report on how in some of the better off countries it's the elderly who are taking the financial hit this and more just ahead here on altie. catalonia wants to get its independence from the rest of spain locals feel that madrid...
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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so how many hours a day would you be studying mime in paris? >> well, you know -- you find that funny, don't you? i don't either. where else would you study mime. >> jimmy: you learn it all in two week, it's like, okay, number one, be quiet. number two, you got to put white stuff on your face. >> no, see, you're all wrong right away. >> jimmy: am i really? no white stuff on the face? >> no, no. >> jimmy: what kind of mime was this? >> well, i'll tell you, it was -- okay, i mean i can give you an obscure reference but you know film, right? >> jimmy: barely. i know "king kong." that for me is the top of the heap. >> then you're not going to get this reference jmg maybe there will be one person in the audience who gets it. >> okay, i studied with the man who developed this technique with another great artist by the name of jean-loup wist baroit. you do know him. >> jimmy: oh, yes. >> they did a film called "children of paradise" which was a classic french film. >> jimmy: okay. >> and that if you look at that, you'll get an idea of what they were d
so how many hours a day would you be studying mime in paris? >> well, you know -- you find that funny, don't you? i don't either. where else would you study mime. >> jimmy: you learn it all in two week, it's like, okay, number one, be quiet. number two, you got to put white stuff on your face. >> no, see, you're all wrong right away. >> jimmy: am i really? no white stuff on the face? >> no, no. >> jimmy: what kind of mime was this? >> well, i'll tell...
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prime minister medvedev has said today that he will be keeping it in the year and he was saying that in paris while blessing a major business deal is a way that russia and indeed russian companies can really capitalize on the miseries in your own really get something out of it well apparently there are bargains for the taking basically of the european market right now and russian companies are going ahead with that i'll tell you all about it the couple of great notes after the break thanks a lot to me to. parents versus social workers dot nabbing. dot the man you've met children have become prizes to fight for why does the law threaten families for social for if you see me in the film of the right of your home anymore they feel that they have any kind of suspicion about the world of the of your children are often a just better at bringing up kids than their own mom and dad. if your mother. we have an industry that's a. concentrated form. of the footrace chill. it was not the military as army announced today it signed a new contract with a unit of the huge contracting however it was not the op
prime minister medvedev has said today that he will be keeping it in the year and he was saying that in paris while blessing a major business deal is a way that russia and indeed russian companies can really capitalize on the miseries in your own really get something out of it well apparently there are bargains for the taking basically of the european market right now and russian companies are going ahead with that i'll tell you all about it the couple of great notes after the break thanks a...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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WHUT
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quite a few chinese designers are showing regularly in london and paris. i am very happy to see that they are having this enthusiasm and interest in modernizing business, modernize and design. >> the lifestyle you are promoting is only available to a small group of very rich people. does that concern you? >> i am always ask, what do you think about promoting luxury in this expensive lifestyle? i always say that you can be stylish without buying expensive things. style is an identity on how you see yourself. in china, the model is very different. young girls today will probably be totally transformed in a month, because it is a sharply changing society. from my perspective, i do not give up on anyone. >> unusually for a publishing venture, they made a profit in the first year. there is no question that there is an appetite for the lifestyle it promotes. the challenge now is to nurture the creative talent within the country to satisfy that demand. >> that is it from beijing for now. i will be back at the same time tomorrow. of course, there is plenty of anal
quite a few chinese designers are showing regularly in london and paris. i am very happy to see that they are having this enthusiasm and interest in modernizing business, modernize and design. >> the lifestyle you are promoting is only available to a small group of very rich people. does that concern you? >> i am always ask, what do you think about promoting luxury in this expensive lifestyle? i always say that you can be stylish without buying expensive things. style is an identity...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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. >> on to paris and christian lacroix known for famous designs. what will we find them. >> lacroix is known for couture, vivid colors like the magenta i'm wearing. this hotel dates back to the 17th century. instead of krcroissants, you'll find a blow-up in the room of wallpaper. there are some elements very contemporary, some very modern, but there is just a whimsical and fun. if you're going to paris and want to stay somewhere that doesn't feel cookie cutter, this is a good choice. in the november issue of travel magazine, we feature this area as kind of a buzzy place to go for shopping, eating and exploring. >> it's hard to be in paris and not be inspired to shop, anyway, and then you're surrounded by christian lacroix. how can you go wrong? >> i'm concerned about the credit card bill, but it's worth it. >> and then the dominican republic, and that would be a famous stomping ground of an oscar de la renta print? >> he has gone back and put his signature on a gorgeous hotel called ortega bay. this has 14 different villas. obviously he's popular f
. >> on to paris and christian lacroix known for famous designs. what will we find them. >> lacroix is known for couture, vivid colors like the magenta i'm wearing. this hotel dates back to the 17th century. instead of krcroissants, you'll find a blow-up in the room of wallpaper. there are some elements very contemporary, some very modern, but there is just a whimsical and fun. if you're going to paris and want to stay somewhere that doesn't feel cookie cutter, this is a good...